Reader small image

You're reading from  Linux Kernel Programming - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803232225
Edition2nd Edition
Tools
Right arrow
Author (1)
Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Kaiwan N. Billimoria
author image
Kaiwan N. Billimoria

Kaiwan N. Billimoria taught himself BASIC programming on his dad's IBM PC back in 1983. He was programming in C and Assembly on DOS until he discovered the joys of Unix, and by around 1997, Linux! Kaiwan has worked on many aspects of the Linux system programming stack, including Bash scripting, system programming in C, kernel internals, device drivers, and embedded Linux work. He has actively worked on several commercial/FOSS projects. His contributions include drivers to the mainline Linux OS and many smaller projects hosted on GitHub. His Linux passion feeds well into his passion for teaching these topics to engineers, which he has done for well over two decades now. He's also the author of Hands-On System Programming with Linux, Linux Kernel Programming (and its Part 2 book) and Linux Kernel Debugging. It doesn't hurt that he is a recreational ultrarunner too.
Read more about Kaiwan N. Billimoria

Right arrow

Lock-free programming with per-CPU and RCU

As you have learned, when operating upon shared writable data, the critical section must be protected in some manner. Locking is perhaps the most common technology used to effect this protection. It’s not all rosy, though, as performance can suffer.

To quite intuitively see why, consider a few physical-world analogies to a lock:

  • One is a funnel, with the stem of the funnel – the ‘“critical section” – just wide enough to allow one thread at a time to flow through, and no more.
  • Another is a single toll booth on a wide and busy highway, or a set of traffic lights at a busy intersection.

These analogies help us visualize and understand why locking can cause bottlenecks, slowing performance down to a crawl in some drastic cases. Worse, these adverse effects can be multiplied on high-end (SMP/NUMA) multicore systems (with a few hundred cores); in effect, locking doesn’...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Linux Kernel Programming - Second Edition
Published in: Feb 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803232225

Author (1)

author image
Kaiwan N. Billimoria

Kaiwan N. Billimoria taught himself BASIC programming on his dad's IBM PC back in 1983. He was programming in C and Assembly on DOS until he discovered the joys of Unix, and by around 1997, Linux! Kaiwan has worked on many aspects of the Linux system programming stack, including Bash scripting, system programming in C, kernel internals, device drivers, and embedded Linux work. He has actively worked on several commercial/FOSS projects. His contributions include drivers to the mainline Linux OS and many smaller projects hosted on GitHub. His Linux passion feeds well into his passion for teaching these topics to engineers, which he has done for well over two decades now. He's also the author of Hands-On System Programming with Linux, Linux Kernel Programming (and its Part 2 book) and Linux Kernel Debugging. It doesn't hurt that he is a recreational ultrarunner too.
Read more about Kaiwan N. Billimoria